A family is fighting for answers and justice after a police officer slammed their teenage son to the ground in his high school. Parris Moore suffered a fractured skull and permanent brain damage. Parris was just two weeks into his freshman year at Auburn High School in Rockford last year. He had left his classroom and was wandering the hallway when this incident began. His grandmother, Diane Morgan, got a call to get to the school. "I got out of the truck. I entered the school," Morgan said. "The officer approached me and informed me that there was a little struggle - Parris had slipped and fell and hit his head." The incident began just after 9 a.m. Diane Morgan arrived at the school shortly after paramedics. "I see my grandson sitting in a wheelchair, shaking so bad that it was just unreal," she said. School security camera video shows Parris handcuffed in that wheelchair when his grandmother arrived. "I was so angry that it just, I couldn't hardly take it. I was shaking myself," said Moore who, along with her grandson, are seen on the video wiping away tears. She had no idea what really happened or the severity of her grandson's injuries. "The boy could barely even walk to my car. He was shaking so bad," Morgan said. "I got him in the truck and proceeded to take him to hospital." She says he was unsteady, had bruising on his body, and complained of knee pain. But it was his head that was really hurting. Hospital scans revealed the source of the head pain - a skull fracture. "He could have instantly been dead, just like that," said Morgan. Parris' mother, Stephene Moore, also was by his side. "They traumatized him for the rest of his life," said Stephene Moore. The family started demanding answers from the school staff. "They just said that he was in the hall refusing to go back in his classroom," said Morgan. She says Student Resource Officer Bradley Lauer, a Rockford police officer who had been detailed at the school, told her there was only a little struggle before Parris slipped and fell. The family did not believe that or the school's account of what happened, given the size of the skull fracture. They demanded to see the school security video and hired an attorney. A month later, the video was finally turned over and showed what really happened. In the video, you can see Parris wandering the hallways when he was supposed to be in class. The assistant principal tries to stop him and grabs him. Parris tries to get away. Then Officer Lauer takes over. He grabs Parris, lifts him up, and forces him head-first into the hard school floor. The 4-foot-11, 140-pound teen was knocked out cold. His mother says it was hard to watch the video. "My son laying there not being able to move at all," said Stephene Moore. "They're just digging through his pockets, and he's just a limp body laying there." Al Hofeld Jr., the family's attorney, says the officer used excessive force. "This officer used a deadly kind of force to take Parris down and knock him out cold, when that was totally unnecessary," said Hofeld. "He has a traumatic brain injury because of this incident. He has permanent brain damage in the areas of memory, speech." The CBS 2 Investigators obtained federal data from the 2017-2018 school year, the most recent available. It shows Auburn High School referred students to police 72 times that year, resulting in 43 arrests. The data also reveal the school referred students more often to police than 94 percent of all other high schools in the nation. "I feel that there is a way better way to handle it than what they did," said Morgan. She says this was a school disciplinary matter, not a police matter. Far too often, student resource officers are used to deal with student behavioral issues - escalating situations instead of deescalating them. Last year, the CBS 2 Investigators reported on Chicago student Dnigma Howard being dragged down the stairs at Marshall High School for talking on her cell phone. This also was done by a school resource officer. Howard was repeatedly Tasered and then charged with a crime. The charges were dropped when video of the incident surfaced. She received a six-figure settlement from Chicago Public Schools. Parris Moore also faced charges, but not right away. Not until two months later - after the family hired a lawyer to file a lawsuit against the school district and police. The family calls that retaliation. "I think, they thought they was going to scare somebody to back off - and it's not working," said Morgan. The Rockford school district and police department refused to comment on the head slam and treatment of Parris. Attempts to reach the officer was unsuccessful. The family's attorney says he's filing a lawsuit next week. https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/new...student-school-resource-officer-body-slammed/
speaking of Chicago, look how diverse the criminals are! @Nook If only LA city council could be as diverse and productive as these people
Fire all the administrators and teachers that hid this video and covered up the story for multiple months. Make sure they are black listed and can't return to that profession in another part of the country.
As long as you can find criminal statutes for what the teachers and administrators did. Obviously you can criminally charge the cop here with some form of assault. But what do you charge the teachers and admin staff with? I'm hoping they find something because what they did SHOULD be illegal and have felony charges attached to it.
In before @Commodore @Salvy @Trader_Jorge Why wasn't he in class? You know this wouldn't have happened if he was in class. Why didn't he just turn around and go back to class? Where are his parents? Why is his grandmother raising him?
This is the problem with the "it's just a few bad cops" issue. The bigger problem is everyone else that tries to protect them and cover things up - that requires a lot of people and all are contributing to the problem.
the few “good cops” that exist never speak out…they just sit idly by or help to cover up apparently this happened in 2021…I’m surprised no one ended up dead
I am a teacher and if I saw this happen in front of me, I would have stepped to the cop and probably have gotten arrested myself. It seems the administration was letting the police deal with their problems, the grandmother can sue the police the school district and the city. The only time an officer or a teacher/administrator is supposed to put their hands on a student is when they are a danger to somebody else or themselves, or property is being destroyed. Why the hell did this cop just full on head slam this kid when he was not even really fighting him? This really makes my blood boil.
No excuse for this. LEO needs to be charged and administers need to be at least fired for the coverup.
Cop mentality: Be stronger. Be meaner. Preemptively get them before they get you. Literally 'one level above' is policy. SMH
On the street, I can see that as a survival mechanism, but in a freaking H.S. with a child that small? And then he pretty much pile drived him and tried to say he slipped and no teacher spoke up and told the truth. Man, just saying that again makes me heated. I have to wonder what the demographics are of the school and how that kid fits in, I can't understand how anybody thought they could lie about something like that and not turn over the video. A lot of entitlement was going on.
What a F`n jerk off.................man I hate when these so called cops act as if there above the law and act like a ****